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Cameron: Britain Can’t Opt Out of Fight against ISIL

Cameron: Britain Can’t Opt Out of Fight against ISIL
folder_openUnited Kingdom access_time10 years ago
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Local Editor

British PM David Cameron stressed that his country cannot opt out of a battle against ISIL extremis, as newspapers reported he was considering joining air strikes targeting the group.

Cameron: Britain Can’t Opt Out of Fight against ISIL"This is a fight you cannot opt out of. These people want to kill us," Cameron told an interview with NBC news, saying that the militants had planned attacks in Europe and elsewhere.

"They've got us in their sights and we have to put together this coalition, working with radical support... to make sure that we ultimately destroy this evil organization."

Cameron has given his backing to air strikes and missile attacks against the extremist group by the United States and Arab allies, but has so far limited British involvement to arming Kurdish fighters and supportive roles.
However, The Independent newspaper reported that Cameron could recall lawmakers to an emergency session to debate whether Britain should join air strikes, when he returns from a United Nations summit in New York at the end of the week.

In an interview with magazine The Spectator, British Defense Secretary Michael Fallon said that Cameron has "little time for the idea that Britain should stay out of the fight".

"He seems morally offended at the suggestion that we should leave it to other countries to deal with ISIL and irritated at the failure of some to grasp that the struggle against Islamist extremism is 'Britain's business'", Fallon said.

Fallon said that he hoped parliament would support the proposal this time.
"I hope parliament now will have the courage shown by our armed forces... to take on this challenge but we'll see."

In a bid to rally regional allies to the fight, Cameron is to meet with Iran's President Hassan Rouhani to discuss unrest in Iraq and Syria in the first meeting in decades between the country's leaders.

The British Conservative leader also met with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi on Tuesday to stress the country's importance in "the fight against extremism", his office said.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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